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Feb 12 2026SPORTS

A Winter Games Apology Turns Into a Public Drama

Sturla Holm Lægreid, a 29‑year‑old Norwegian biathlete, won bronze at the Milan Cortina 2026 and then surprised everyone by confessing on live TV that he had cheated on his partner. The interview, meant to celebrate his medal, turned into a personal tear‑jerker that sparked backlash from the media a

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Feb 12 2026TECHNOLOGY

Samsung’s New Five‑Layer OLED Tech

Samsung Display has introduced a new brand called “QD‑OLED Penta‑Tandem. ” The name means “five layers” in Greek, and it refers to the extra layer added to its OLED panels. The company says this fifth layer makes the screens brighter and lasts longer. It also helps keep the picture clear when man

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Feb 12 2026TECHNOLOGY

Samsung Shares New Memory Samples With Qualcomm Ahead of 2026 Launch

Samsung has already shipped early samples of its next‑generation LPDDR6X memory to Qualcomm, according to a Korean tech outlet. The move comes as Samsung readies its LPDDR6 standard for mass production, targeting a second‑half 2026 release. Early figures suggest the new memory will run at about 10.

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Feb 12 2026SPORTS

Lights Out, Wins Won: Syracuse’s Wild Tuesday

Syracuse started its sports day with a big shock: the university’s athletic director, John Wildhack, announced he would retire on July 1. The news came just before the Orange were set to face California in the JMA Wireless Dome, adding extra pressure on the team and its new head coach, Adrian Autry.

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Feb 12 2026HEALTH

Sussex County Faces Norovirus Outbreak, Not Food‑Related

Sussex County health officials have warned residents that a sudden rise in stomach sickness is likely due to norovirus, not contaminated food. The county’s Division of Health began investigating after a spike in complaints of diarrhea, nausea and vomiting from people who ate out between January 30 a

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Feb 12 2026OPINION

City Pay Hikes and the Rising Tax Burden

San Diego residents already shoulder extra costs from city‑imposed fees, yet officials claim that further charges are unavoidable because of a “decades‑old structural budget deficit. ” The reality is that the deficit grows from choices made by those in power, not from unseen forces. City leaders

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Feb 12 2026SCIENCE

Shorter Winters in Great Lakes Cities Signal Rising Temperatures

Scientists have found that winter seasons are getting noticeably shorter in many U. S. cities, especially those near the Great Lakes. The new analysis looked at 245 weather stations across the country and compared data from two time periods: 1970‑1997 and 1998‑2025. In most places, the coldest part

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Feb 12 2026EDUCATION

Campus Space: A Lot of Room to Improve

U. S. colleges are sitting on a lot of empty space. In 2025, only 45% of campus buildings were being used. That's a big drop from 53% the year before. Most schools aim for at least 70% use. This means a lot of buildings are just sitting there, empty. This isn't just about wasted space. It's about m

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Feb 12 2026EDUCATION

How Coaching Can Make Surgeons Better Teachers

Surgeons are skilled at their jobs, but teaching others is a different ball game. A recent study wants to see if coaching can help surgeons improve their teaching skills. The focus is on a special coaching model designed for faculty members. The idea is simple: if surgeons get coaching, they might

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Feb 12 2026SPORTS

A Snowboarder's Scary Moment and the Good News That Followed

Snowboarding is an extreme sport. It's all about speed, skill, and sometimes, unfortunate accidents. This was clear during the women's snowboard halfpipe event at the Winter Olympics. A seasoned athlete, Liu Jiayu, took a hard tumble. She was attempting a tricky spin when things went wrong. She didn

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